By David BoscoDavid Bosco is a Foreign Policy contributing editor and assistant professor at American University's School of International Service. He is at work on a book about the International Criminal Court's first decade.

January 30, 2013

The International Monetary Fund released a terse statement yesterday regarding Argentina:

On January 29, 2013, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was briefed by staff on economic developments in Argentina, whose Article IV consultation is delayed by 62 months.

Informal sessions to brief the Board based on information available are held approximately every 12 months for members whose Article IV consultations are delayed by more than 18 months.

That dry announcement is actually the latest salvo in a long-running battle between the international lender and one of South America’s leading economies. The bad blood dates back to the country’s 2001 economic collapse, which many in Argentina believe the Fund’s policies exacerbated. Since 2006, Argentina has refused to participate in normal annual reviews of its financial and economic health required by the IMF’s Articles of Agreement. That impasse has, in turn, encouraged the Fund to think more systematically about how to deal with members who refuse to participate in its economic surveillance program. Its report noted a worrying trend in compliance:

A few recent cases of severely delayed consultations have underscored the need to better promote timeliness of consultations. The Fund has relied on a cooperative approach to consulting with members, setting consultation deadlines as expectations rather than firm obligations. This approach has worked well for most of the membership. Historically, delays in Article IV consultations have generally been relatively short or, in cases of extended delays, for reasons beyond members’ control. However, some recent delays have been unusually long for reasons that are not clearly beyond the members’ control.

The IMF has an even more specific beef with Argentine officials: the quality of official data on inflation. Last year, the IMF repeatedly made clear its concerns about numbers provided by the government and warned that it might formally sanction the country if it does not address those concerns. Michael Warren of the Associated Press provides the background to the slow-moving confrontation over data:

The IMF has lost patience with these numbers after urging Argentina for years to improve this consumer price index, which lost credibility in 2007 after political appointees replaced career statisticians. The new methodology, which has kept official yearly inflation in the range of 10 per cent ever since, has not been fully explained, even as consumers complain about soaring costs of beef and other staples. IMF experts and Argentine economists have spent months working privately with government officials to recommend very detailed ways to get accurate numbers again, but the government has yet to adopt them.

The IMF is now on the 12th step of a 15-point process for flagging Argentina with what IMF Director Christine Lagarde called “the red card” for countries that don’t follow the rules.

What exactly that red card might entail has been left somewhat vague, but the loss of voting rights and even formal expulsion have been discussed. It’s doubtful matters would reach that point. Expulsions from international organizations are rare, even in the face of continued acts of defiance.

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About David Bosco

David Bosco is a Foreign Policy contributing editor and assistant professor at American University's School of International Service. He is at work on a book about the International Criminal Court's first decade.